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Lewis-McChord soldiers concerned about Afghan massacre fallout

 
 
Reply Tue 13 Mar, 2012 11:03 am
Mar. 13, 2012
Lewis-McChord soldiers concerned about Afghan massacre fallout
Christian Hill | The (Tacoma) News Tribune

Army Spc. Joshua Pinheiro dropped by a sewing shop Monday near Joint Base Lewis-McChord to get a name tag sewn on his rucksack.

Business is brisk at Jeannie’s Sewing Shop as Pinheiro, 22, and other soldiers check off their to-do lists as they prepare for a deployment to Afghanistan. Pinheiro and the 4,000 other soldiers in 2nd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division will depart this spring for a nine-month tour.

The upcoming mission will be made more challenging and dangerous, Pinheiro and other local soldiers said, due to the actions of one soldier assigned to another Lewis-McChord Stryker brigade. The unidentified 38-year-old staff sergeant went door to door and gunned down 16 Afghan civilians, including nine children, before turning himself into authorities Sunday. The incident made international headlines and is another setback for U.S-Afghanistan relations as the Obama administration looks to conclude the decadelong war there.

“I feel sad for the dudes who are on the line now,” Pinheiro said.

Pinheiro said he was shocked when he first heard the news.

“I think it’s ridiculous,” he said. “They’re human beings. How could you take lives in cold blood like that? They’re not all terrorists.”

Local soldiers shared the worries of U.S. officials that the massacre would lead to a repeat of the violence and unrest that followed last month’s burning of Qurans at a U.S. military base in Afghanistan.

Soldiers also agreed that the massacre sheds more negative light on Lewis-McChord, the largest military installation on the West Coast with about 40,00 active-duty soldiers and airmen. The installation gained notoriety for more than a year during the investigation and prosecution of soldiers from another combat brigadewho killed Afghan civilians for sport. There’s also been high-profile crimes committed locally by former or current Lewis-McChord soldiers.

Sgt. Justin Bishop, 24, another Lewis-McChord soldier heading to Afghanistan, said the vast majority of its soldiers serve honorably and their contributions are undone by a few who “go out of their way and ruin it for the rest of us.”

Spc. Andrew Baker, 20, said he talked with his father, a senior enlisted soldier stationed in Georgia, after his father asked about all the problems at Joint Base Lewis-McChord. Baker believed combat stress was a factor in Sunday’s attacks – the soldier reportedly served three prior tours in Iraq – and he wondered why warning signs were missed. CNN reported Monday that the soldier suspected in the attack was a sniper who was diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury in 2010.

“It could have been avoided, and it should have been avoided,” Baker said.

Jorge Gonzalez, executive director of Coffee Strong in Lakewood, called for a congressional investigation into why Lewis-McChord’s leadership is failing its soldiers. The shop, located near the sewing center, provides counseling and other outreach to Lewis-McChord soldiers. The organization had planned a Monday night vigil for the victims of Sunday’s attacks but canceled it out of concern it would be seen as criticizing the Army and its soldiers.

Gonzalez, an Iraq war veteran, recognizes that other Army bases have their share of problems, “but for some reason it keeps happening over and over here.”
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
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Reply Mon 19 Mar, 2012 12:15 pm
@BumbleBeeBoogie,
Mar. 19, 2012
Former Lewis-McChord soldiers weigh in on Bales
Lewis Kamb | The (Tacoma) News Tribune

last updated: March 19, 2012 07:39:47 AM

Two former Stryker soldiers who've gone on multiple combat deployments and dealt with the trauma that can follow them offer divergent perspectives about whether such experiences could have played a role in Staff Sgt. Robert Bales' alleged massacre of Afghan civilians.

“It’s not shocking to me,” said Kevin Baker, a former staff sergeant with Joint Base Lewis-McChord’s 4th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division. “There are hundreds, if not thousands, of soldiers who are screaming for help, but they aren’t getting it. And this was what, his fourth deployment? That’s pretty ridiculous.”

But Joshua Renschler, a retired sergeant with Lewis-McChord’s 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, sees it differently: “These were planned, cold-blooded, clear-cut killings.”

“I don’t see it as just being a culmination of military-related events that took place, and he just snapped and did it,” said Renschler, who belonged to the same brigade as Bales. “I’m sorry, but this is not to be blamed on multiple deployments or (post-traumatic stress disorder) and (traumatic brain injury).”

Bales, 38, of Lake Tapps, is at a military prison in Kansas awaiting charges. He allegedly left his base in southern Afghanistan on March 11, gunned down 16 villagers including nine children, and burned some of their bodies.

His Seattle-based attorney says it’s too soon to say whether Bales suffered from PTSD, but that he sustained a head injury on one of his three previous deployments. Accounts have varied over whether it was combat- or noncombat-related.

Both Baker, 27, now a Los Angeles Community College student and anti-war activist, and Renschler, 29, national director of the Tacoma-based support group Men of Valor, served more than one deployment to Iraq.

Both veterans also developed PTSD. And both reject the idea that Lewis-McChord is a rogue base that breeds troubled soldiers, although they reach that conclusion in different ways.

“To say this is all Fort Lewis’ problem, that’s really just doing containment for the military,” Baker said. “The entire military is in crisis. There’s more suicides among soldiers nationwide in the last six years than there have been (soldiers) killed in combat. There needs to be an investigation and overhaul of the entire military culture in this country.”

Renschler said, “There’s a danger in wrapping this all up as a ‘Fort Lewis thing.’”

“Fort Lewis and Madigan (Army Medical Center) have done a really good job saying some things have got to change for soldiers transitioning back from combat. But it’s an extremely overworked system, and they are extremely understaffed. We need the community to step up and fill those gaps.”

Baker, who deployed to Iraq in 2007 and again in 2008, said he was struggling with combat-related stress and sought treatment while awaiting a third deployment. After an Army psychologist initially diagnosed him with adjustment disorder, he turned to an on-base, military-sanctioned group therapy program that led to a re-diagnosis of PTSD and his eventual separation from the Army.

“I was the last one to be medically discharged and then they disassembled (the program),” Baker said. “What I heard was that the administration believed it was leading to too many PTSD discharges.”

Meantime, he said fellow soldiers in his Stryker unit were showing tell-tale signs of PTSD but being sent back into combat. One soldier threw himself out of a window, he said. Another killed himself.

“It’s absurd,” Baker said. “You have hundreds of soldiers who should be getting discharged that instead are essentially getting punished administratively for not living up to Army values because they have PTSD. Then, they’re sent back to combat.”

Renschler, who served 51/2 years in the Army, said he suffered a traumatic brain injury and broke his back falling off a Stryker combat vehicle in Iraq in 2004. While he was recovering back home at the base south of Tacoma, his Stryker unit in Iraq struck a roadside bomb. Six soldiers and one Russian journalist were killed in the May 2007 attack, which at the time was the largest single loss of life in a Stryker vehicle.

Already suffering from severe physical injuries, Renschler developed survivor’s guilt. He tried to save his military career but ultimately received a medical retirement. He later took a state corrections officer’s job at McNeil Island, but during a traumatic event at the prison he suffered a panic attack and was rushed to a Lakewood hospital.

“That’s when I was finally told I had PTSD and needed to get help,” Renschler said.

He joined a Veterans Administration treatment program but found it lacking. Through his church, he discovered a workbook for returning soldiers, called The Combat Trauma Healing Manual. He worked through its exercises, discovering his “new normal.”

Renschler now uses the manual to help guide group-therapy sessions for soldiers who’ve suffered trauma.

“The soldiers I work with at Fort Lewis and at the VA system as well, they have places they can go,” he said. “There are plenty of resources out there, but some of this stuff needs to be supplemented. More often than not, a soldier doesn’t want to admit they have a problem. That will keep them from going to get these services.”

Renschler said he’s able to reach soldiers through the Men of Valor program because he’s able to identify with what they’re going through.

“But we don’t fix them,” he added. “We’re here for them and support them, but we’re clear: ‘You’re going to need to get some help for some of the other issues.’”

Unlike Renschler, Baker, who co-founded a veterans’ and active service members’ anti-war group called March Forward, believes the Army has ignored combat-related stress and over-deployment problems among soldiers.

“I was honestly at the point of breaking,” Baker said of his mental state at the time of his last ordered deployment. “It was to the point where I wasn’t sure what I was going to do. I was not going back (to Iraq) and I was going to get out no matter what. But how that path would have developed, I’m glad I didn’t have to find out.”

Renschler believes the complexities of multiple deployments and combat stress are too often used as a scapegoat – likely by soldiers with mental health issues and other problems that existed before they enlisted.

“I had it really bad, but at no time did I ever have thoughts of blowing up the state Capitol or taking innocent people’s lives,” he said. “I’m not a puppet on string. I still have the ability to make a choice.”

“I’ll tell you flat out, some of the therapies are inadequate,” Renschler added. “But that doesn’t mean you give up and say there’s nothing out there to fix me. Look for something better.”
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Tue 20 Mar, 2012 10:46 am
@BumbleBeeBoogie,
March 20, 2012
Wife of Staff Sgt. Robert Bales releases statement
Christian Hill | The (Tacoma) News Tribune

Karilyn Bales, the wife of Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, the Joint Base Lewis-McChord soldier suspected of killing 16 civilians in Afghanistan, released a written statement Monday through the family’s spokesman, Seattle attorney Lance Rosen.

Here’s the statement, which was first released to The News Tribune, in its entirety:

What happened on the night of March 11 in Kandahar province was a terrible and heartbreaking tragedy.

My family including my and Bob’s extended families are all profoundly sad. We extend our condolences to all the people of the Panjwai district; our hearts go out to all of them, especially to the parents, brothers, sisters and grandparents of the children who perished.

I know that all good people around the world, regardless of nationality, religion or political values, join me in grieving that such a terrible thing could happen.

Our family has little information beyond what we read and see in the media. What has been reported is completely out of character of the man I know and admire. Please respect me when I say I cannot shed any light on what happened that night, so please do not ask. I too want to know what happened. I want to know how this could be.

I have no indication that my family’s own safety is at risk, but I appreciate the efforts that have been undertaken to protect us. I hope there will soon be no reason for protection of families, whether here or in Kandahar province, or anywhere, because the pain inevitably inflicted in war should never be an excuse to inflict yet more pain. The cycle must be broken. We must find peace.

I know the media has a right to pursue and report news. As you do your jobs, I plead with you to respect the trauma that I and my extended family are experiencing. Please allow us some peace and time as we try to make sense of something that makes no sense at all.

All I can do now is emphasize my sadness and my condolences to the families in Panjwai for their terrible loss. The victims and their families are all in my prayers, as is my husband who I love very much.

Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2012/03/20/142490/wife-of-staff-sgt-robert-bales.html#storylink=omni_popular#storylink=cpy
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